Times of Oman

Spain acts to maintain direct rule on Catalonia

Madrid and Barcelona are engaged in a standoff after regional elections called by the government in December returned a majority of seats for pro-independen­ce parties

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MADRID: Spain acted to maintain direct rule on Catalonia on Monday after the government objected to the choice of councillor­s by fervent separatist leader Quim Torra who has vowed to recreate the administra­tion fired by Madrid for declaring independen­ce.

Madrid and Barcelona are engaged in a stand-off after regional elections called by the government in December returned a majority of seats for pro-independen­ce parties.

Madrid has imposed direct rule until a new regional government is in place. It is uncertain now when direct rule will be lifted. Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said on Monday he hoped Catalonia would soon form a viable government that would obey the law.

“I hope there will soon be a government that is viable, that obeys the law and that enters into dialogue with us - one that will work to recover institutio­nal and political normality in our country,” he said in a speech at an event in Galicia. The Spanish government on Monday recognised the powers of newly-elected leader Torra but refused to ratify his choice of councillor­s - four of whom are facing charges linked to last year’s independen­ce drive, official documents showed.

Two of the four men are being held in custody in a Madrid jail awaiting trial while the other two are in self-imposed exile in Belgium.

Under the terms

of emergency legislatio­n brought in to take over the Catalan administra­tion, Madrid must lift direct rule once the Catalan government is fully formed and cabinet members named.

But the government said the naming of the four men, accused of crimes including rebellion and misuse of public funds, amounted to a deliberate provocatio­n.

Spanish courts ruled that an October 1 independen­ce referendum and subsequent declaratio­n of independen­ce were illegal because they went against Spain’s constituti­on which states the nation is indivisibl­e.

Rajoy telephoned two opposition leaders - Pedro Sanchez of the Socialists and Albert Rivera of Ciudadanos (“Citizens”) - on Saturday to discuss the situation and ask for their support.

Both parties, which together with Rajoy’s centre-right People’s Party (PP) make up a majority of seats in Spain’s parliament, agree that direct rule of Catalonia must be maintained until a regional administra­tion is in place.

“We, all those parties which support the constituti­on, must accept reality and apply the constituti­on together,” Rivera said in a television interview on Monday. “Peace and stability are needed in Catalonia for its economy and for social harmony.”

 ?? - Reuters ?? BRIEFING: Newly elected Catalan regional leader Quim Torra speaks to reporters outside the Estremera prison where he visited former Catalan cabinet members Oriol Junqueras, Jordi Turull, Joaquim Forn, Josep Rull and Raul Romeva who are jailed there...
- Reuters BRIEFING: Newly elected Catalan regional leader Quim Torra speaks to reporters outside the Estremera prison where he visited former Catalan cabinet members Oriol Junqueras, Jordi Turull, Joaquim Forn, Josep Rull and Raul Romeva who are jailed there...

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